Sir William Lawrence Bragg James Bryant Conant Roscoe Dickinson Samuel Goudsmit Roger Hayward Werner Heisenberg Walter Heitler Arthur Lamb Irving Langmuir G. N. Lewis Fritz London Robert Millikan Robert Mulliken A. A. Noyes J. Robert Oppenheimer Wolfgang Pauli Linus Pauling Erwin Schrödinger John Slater Arnold Sommerfeld J. Holmes Sturdivant Richard Tolman Max Theodore Felix von Laue Don YostView all Key Participants
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Linus Pauling1901-1994
Ava Helen and Linus Pauling Papers Location: Special Collections, Oregon State University Address: 121 The Valley Library, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331-4501 Size: 4400 linear ft. Phone: 541-737-2075 Fax: 541-737-8674 Email: scarc@oregonstate.edu Web: http://scarc.library.oregonstate.edu/coll/pauling
Correspondence
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Arnold Sommerfeld. October 20, 1925.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to the Research Fellowship Board of the National Research
Council. December 28, 1925.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. April 25, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling and Ava Helen Pauling to A.A. Noyes. May 22, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. July 12, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. November 22, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. December 17, 1926.
- Letter from Henry Allen Moe to Linus Pauling. March 9, 1927.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Samuel Goudsmit. November 16, 1927.
- Letter from Samuel Goudsmit to Linus Pauling. November 21, 1927.
- Letter from A.A. Noyes to Linus Pauling. November 29, 1927.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to G.N. Lewis. March 7, 1928.
- Letter from Gerald Wendt to Linus Pauling. March 13, 1928.
- Letter from G.N. Lewis to Linus Pauling. May 1, 1928.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to W.L. Bragg. October 22, 1928.
- Letter from James Conant to Linus Pauling. February 20, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. February 24, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to W.L. Bragg. March 21, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. March 21, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to G.N. Lewis. May 18, 1929.
- Letter from James Conant to Linus Pauling. May 20, 1929.
- Letter from Robert Millikan to Linus Pauling. May 21, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to James Conant. May 23, 1929.
- Letter from G.N. Lewis to Linus Pauling. May 29, 1929.
- Letter from John C. Slater to Linus Pauling. June 16, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to W.L. Bragg. July 15, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to W.L. Bragg. September 16, 1929.
- Letter from Norman Smith to Linus Pauling. November 27, 1929.
- Letter from G.N. Lewis to Linus Pauling. March 8, 1930.
- Letter from John C. Slater to Linus Pauling. January 21, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. January 27, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to John C. Slater. February 9, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Arthur B. Lamb. February 11, 1931.
- Letter from Arthur Lamb to Linus Pauling. February 26, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Arthur B. Lamb. June 4, 1931.
- Letter from Moses Gomberg to Linus Pauling. July 8, 1931.
- Letter from Karl Compton to Linus Pauling. October 15, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Karl Compton. October 23, 1931.
- Letter from Jack Sherman to Linus Pauling. April 10, 1932.
- Letter from Jack Sherman to Linus Pauling. April 18, 1932.
- Letter from Karl Darrow to Linus Pauling. May 23, 1932.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fred Allen. September 13, 1932.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fred Allen. October 12, 1932.
- Letter from W.A. Noyes to Linus Pauling. November 21, 1932.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to James B. Conant. February 21, 1933.
- Letter from Fred E. Wright to Linus Pauling. April 26, 1933.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fred E. Wright. May 2, 1933.
- Letter from W.A. Jensen to Linus Pauling. May 31, 1933.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fred Allen. July 12, 1933.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fred Allen. November 16, 1933.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes and J.P. Buwalda. February 2, 1934.
- Letter from G.N. Lewis to Linus Pauling. July 18, 1935.
- Letter from Richard C. Tolman to the Executive Council, California Institute of Technology. June 26, 1936.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to the Executive Council, California Institute of Technology. August 10, 1936.
- Letter from Robert Millikan to Linus Pauling. December 15, 1936.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Jacob Papish. December 17, 1936.
- Letter from Edward Barrett to Linus Pauling. May 4, 1937.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Fritz London, October 28, 1937.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to James B. Conant. September 2, 1938.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Irving Langmuir. June 2, 1939.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to W.S. Schaefer. June 13, 1939.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to G.N. Lewis. August 29, 1939.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to William Seifriz. April 12, 1946.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to J. Holmes Sturdivant. February 21, 1948.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to J. Holmes Sturdivant. May 4, 1948.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Arnold Sommerfeld. May 16, 1949.
- Letter from Robert Mulliken to Linus Pauling. July 13, 1951.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Roger Hayward. July 19, 1951.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Lee DuBridge. November 4, 1954.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Linus Pauling, Jr. November 26, 1954.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to the Collector of Internal Revenue, December 5, 1954.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Frank Archibald. December 1, 1955.
Pictures and Illustrations
- Linus Pauling and his friend Paul Emmett. 1920.
- Laue X-Ray Photographs. October 31, 1922.
- Group Photo of Chemistry Staff, California Institute of Technology. 1923.
- X-ray powder diffraction apparatus built by Linus Pauling. 1923.
- X-ray apparatus at Linus Pauling's desk, Gates Laboratory, California Institute of
Technology. 1925.
- Linus Pauling standing outside after graduation ceremonies, California Institute of
Technology. 1925.
- Linus Pauling, Werner Kuhn, and Wolfgang Pauli traveling by boat in Europe. 1926.
- Linus and Ava Helen Pauling’s room in Munich, Germany. 1927.
- Linus Pauling holding Linus Pauling, Jr., Europe. 1927.
- Linus and Ava Helen Pauling in Munich, with Walter Heitler (left) and Fritz London
(right), 1927.
- Linus, Ava Helen, and Linus Pauling Jr. posing in their driveway. 1928.
- Parts of Robert Oppenheimer's mineral collection, given to Linus Pauling. 1928.
- Studio portrait of Ava Helen Pauling, Linus Pauling, Jr. and Linus Pauling. 1930.
- Studio portrait of Linus Pauling. 1930.
- Ava Helen Pauling, Linus Pauling, Jr. and Linus Pauling, Pasadena, California. 1930.
- Ava Helen and Linus Pauling walking down a street. 1930s.
- Portrait of Linus Pauling. 1930s.
- "Pauling Will Accept Cash." September 2, 1931.
- Ava Helen and Linus Pauling. 1933.
- Group Photo of Chemistry Faculty at Caltech, 1933.
- Linda and Linus Pauling with their pet cocker spaniel, "Til Eulenspiegel". 1934.
- Linus Pauling, in lecture at California Institute of Technology. 1935.
- Linus Pauling, in Painted Canyon, California. 1935.
- Jack Sherman and Linus Pauling. 1935.
- Ava Helen and Linus Pauling peeking through the window of the Union Pacific Streamliner
City Of Los Angeles. 1938.
- Advertisement for The Nature of the Chemical Bond. 1939.
- Naphthalene figure prepared for use in the Nature of the Chemical Bond. 1939.
- Ava Helen and Linus Pauling, in Madison, Wisconsin. July 1939.
- Model of a tetrahedron. 1940s.
- Linus Pauling (second from the left) at the Conference on the Foundations of Quantum
Mechanics. (The First Shelter Island Conference) Long Island, New York. June 1947.
- Stöld. 1954.
- Linus Pauling and King Gustav VI, Nobel Prize ceremonies, Stockholm, Sweden. 1954.
- Stage presentation of "The Road to Stockholm: The Appalling Life of Linus Pauling"
presented in commemoration of the first Nobel Prize at Caltech. 1954.
- Nobel Prize for Chemistry. December 10, 1954.
- Linus Pauling holding models of the structure of water. 1960s.
- Linus Pauling lecturing amidst several molecular models. 1960s.
- Line drawing of Linus Pauling. 1963.
- Linus Pauling with a chemical model. 1963.
- Pastel drawing of Camphor. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Ethylene. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Hexamethylenetertramine. 1964.
- Annotated pencil sketch of the structure of ice. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Methane. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Sodium Chloride. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Potassium Ferrocyanide. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Sodium Dicadmide. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Tetragonal Boron. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of Xenon Hydrate. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of a compound of Molybdenum Dichloride. 1964.
- Pastel drawing of a Tantalum Halide cluster ion. 1964.
- Promotional flyer for "Linus Pauling: Crusading Scientist." 1977.
- Linus Pauling, Cartagena, Colombia. November 1983.
- Linus Pauling in front of his chalkboard. August 1991.
- Covers of several different editions of The Nature of the Chemical Bond. October 19, 2004.
Published Papers and Official Documents
- "The theoretical prediction of the physical properties of many-electron atoms and
ions. Mole refraction, diamagnetic susceptibility, and extension in space." January 1, 1927.
- "Uber den anschauclichen Inhalt der quantentheoretischen Kinematik und Mechanik." March 23, 1927.
- "The shared-electron chemical bond." March 7, 1928.
- "The application of the quantum mechanics to the structure of the hydrogen molecule
and hydrogen molecule-ion and to related problems." June 1928.
- "Note on the pressure transitions of the rubidium halides." July 30, 1928.
- "The principles determining the structure of complex ionic crystals." September 5, 1928.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. Application of results obtained from the quantum
mechanics and from a theory of paramagnetic susceptibility to the structure of molecules." February 17, 1931.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. II. The one-electron bond and the three-electron
bond." July 11, 1931.
- "A Thirty-Year-Old Prize Winner Who Once Stumped Einstein." September 4, 1931.
- "Chemical Crystal’s Secrets Revealed by Dr. L. Pauling." October 25, 1931.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. III. The transition from one extreme bond type to
another." November 9, 1931.
- "The additivity of the energies of normal covalent bonds." May 9, 1932.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. IV. The energy of single bonds and the relative
electronegativity of atoms." May 18, 1932.
- "Scientists Publish New Journal Jan. 1." December 23, 1932.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. V. The quantum-mechanical calculation of the resonance
energy of benzene and naphthalene and the hydrocarbon free radicals." March 21, 1933.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. VI. The calculation from thermochemical data of
the energy of resonance of molecules among several electronic structures." April 13, 1933.
- "The nature of the chemical bond. VII. The calculation of resonance energy in conjugated
systems." July 3, 1933.
- Course Catalog: Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute
of Technology. 1940s.
- Course Catalog: Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute
of Technology. 1940s.
- Review of The Nature of the Chemical Bond by George Kistiakowsky. February 1940.
- "Arnold Sommerfeld: 1868-1951." October 1951.
- "Faculty produces a lively musical comedy to celebrate Dr. Pauling’s Nobel laureate." December 9, 1954.
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
- "The Velocity of Sound." 1920s.
- Translation of 'Remarks on the Apparent Selective Reflection of X-Rays in Crystals',
W. Kossel, z. f. Phys., 23, 278 (1924). 1920s.
- "Magnetic Susceptibility and Chemical Combination." 1920s.
- "treatment of spectroscopic data for HCl with use of half quantum numbers". 1923.
- Notes on 'Quantizing non-Harmonic Oscillator-Rotators', M. Born and Hückel, Phys.
z., 24, 1 (1923). 1923.
- "Inter-ionic Attraction in Dwarf Stars." 1924.
- "Sizes of Electrons and Protons." November 1, 1924.
- Notes on 'On the Theory of Quanta', M.H. Poincarè, Journal de Physique, 2, ser. 5,
5 (1912). 1925.
- "Group Theory and Chemical Combination." 1925.
- Translation and Notes on 'Schallausbreitung in Teilweise Dissoziierten Gasen', A.
Einstein, Sitz. der preuss. Akad. Der Wiss., (1920). 1925.
- "Vapor Pressures Near Absolute Zero." February 28, 1925.
- "The Entropy of a Polyatomic Gas at Very Low Temperatures." March 8, 1925.
- Notes on 'Grundlagen und Anwendungen der Statistichen Mechanik', A.Wassmuth, Sammlung
Vieweg, Heft 25. May 7, 1925.
- "The Canonical Distribution." May 10, 1925.
- "Intensitäten nach der Wellenmechanik." 1926 - 1927.
- "The Wave Mechanics Treatment of 'Penetrating Orbits.'" 1926 - 1927.
- "The Hydrogen Mol-Ion in the Wellenmechanik." 1926 - 1927.
- "Eigenfunctions for a Two-Atom Model." 1926 - 1927.
- Notes on 'Die Wasserstoffähnlichen Spelstren von Standpunkt der Polarisierbarkeit
des Atomorenipfes', Schrödinger, Anm. d. Physik. 77, 43 (1925). 1926 - 1927.
- "X-ray Levels and Inverted Terms." 1926 - 1927.
- "Hyperfine Structure — with lisi=ji Coupling." 1926 - 1927.
- "The Interaction Between a Nuclear Spin and Orbital Spinning Electrons." 1926 - 1927.
- "The Mutual Energy of Two Dipoles." 1926 - 1927.
- "Bismuth with 2sp and 1 7s Electrons." 1926 - 1927.
- "Association Due to Dipoles." 1926 - 1927.
- "For ½ nitrob., ½ benz. About Equal Numbers of A and A2 are Present." 1926 - 1927.
- "The Harmonic Oscillator." 1926 - 1927.
- "The Hydrogen Molecule." 1926 - 1927.
- "Quantum Mechanics Averages." 1926 - 1927.
- "He Spectrum, or H2." 1926 - 1927.
- No Title. 1926 - 1927.
- "The Combination of Two Hydrogen Atoms." 1926 - 1927.
- "Penetration of Non-Penetrating Orbits." 1926 - 1927.
- "Atomic Radii." 1926 - 1927.
- "Atomic Radii – Application of Bohr Theory to Atomic (Ionic) Radii." 1926 - 1927.
- Notes on ‘On the Electrical Nature of Chemical Forces’, M. Born, Z. f. Elektrochemie,
30, 382 (1924). 1926 - 1927.
- "The Electrical Conductivity of Metallic Solid Solutions." August 3, 1926.
- "The Wave Functions for the Hydrogen Atom." October 26, 1926.
- Examination: Introduction to Wave Mechanics. 1927.
- Lecture Notes: Quantum Mechanics. 1927 - 1928.
- "London’s paper. General ideas on bonds." 1928.
- "Thomas’s Atoms." 1928.
- Translation of 'Quantum Theory of the Monatomic Perfect Gas', A. Einstein, Setz. P.
Ak. Wiss., 261 (1924). 1928.
- Translation of ‘Quantum Theory of Monatomic Perfect Gas’, A. Einstein, Setz. P. Ak.
Wiss., 3 (1925). 1928.
- Translation of 'Thermal Equilibrium in Radiation Field in Absence of Matter', S.N.
Bose, z. Phys., 27, 384 (1924). 1928.
- Translation of 'Des Adiabstenprinzip ui [?] der Quantenmechanik', M. Born, z.f. Phys.,
40, 167 (1926). 1928.
- "Recipe of Mulliken, Hund, Wigner-Witmer, Herzberg, Lennard-Jones." November 1928.
- Translation of 'Zur Theorie des Kernzerfalls', M. Born, z. f. Phys., 58, 306 (1929). 1929.
- "X-Ray Edges." 1929.
- No Title [re: crystal energies of hydrogen ions]. 1929.
- "Electron Affinities of Halogen Atoms." 1929.
- No Title [re: Pascal’s values for ionic crystal energies]. 1929.
- Berkeley Lectures. February - May 1929.
- Notes on "Assignment of Quantum Numbers for Electrons in Molecules. III. Diatomic
Hydrides." By Robert Mulliken. May 1929.
- "Calcium Germanate Gells." September 12, 1929.
- Notes re: the structures of Naphthalene, Biphenyl, Anthracene and Cyanamide. 1930s.
- "Comments on Mulliken’s Π paper." 1930s.
- "Sidgwick's 'coordinate bond.'" 1930s.
- Notes and Calculations re: Electronegativity and the Electronegativity Scale. 1930s.
- Notes on a discussion with W. E. Tisdale. 1930s.
- Berkeley Lectures. March - April 1930.
- "Compact Tetrahedral Structures." May 20, 1930.
- "The Motion of the Electron in the Hydrogen Molecule-ion, and Similar Problems." May 24, 1930.
- "Eigenfunctions for Chemical Bonds." December 1930.
- "The Nature of the Chemical Bond: The Application of Results Obtained from the Quantum
Mechanics and from a New Theory of Paramagnetic Susceptibility to the Structure of
Molecules." 1931.
- "The Carbon-Oxygen Bond." 1931.
- "Electric Moments and Bond Type." 1931.
- "Diatomic Molecules." 1931.
- Berkeley Lectures. March - April 1931.
- "Potential Functions for Electron-pair Bonds." April 19, 1931.
- "sp3d5 eigenfunctions." June 6, 1931.
- Pasadena Lectures. October - December 1931.
- "Dissociation Energies of Halogen Compounds." November 11, 1931.
- "The Determination of the Structure of Crystals with X-Rays." 1932.
- "Application to the Carnegie Institution of Washington for a Grant in Support of Researches
in Structural Chemistry." 1932.
- "The Normal State of the Helium Molecule Ions He2+ and He2++." 1932 - 1934.
- Berkeley Lectures. February - March 1932.
- M.I.T. Lectures. April 1932 - April 1933.
- "Reconsideration of Bond Energies, with Sherman." October 12, 1932.
- "The Water Molecule." November 14, 1932.
- "Halogen Oxides." December 11, 1932.
- "The Oxygen Molecule." December 16, 1932.
- "The Structure of Hydrargillite, Talc, the Micas, the Brittle Micas, the Chlorites,
and Kaolinite." 1933.
- Examinations, Lecture Notes: Introduction to Quantum Mechanics with Chemical Applications,
Ch 156a, Ch 156b, Ch156c, 1933 - 1934.
- "The Strength of Bond Orbitals." 1934.
- "Benzene." January 6, 1934.
- "Hybridization of Bond Functions." May 13, 1934.
- "The Chemical Bond and the Structure of Molecules" 1935.
- "The Diamagnetic Anisotropy of Aromatic Molecules and Graphite." June 14, 1936.
- "Outline of the George Fischer Baker Lectureship, Cornell University." 1937 - 1938.
- "The Effect of Charge on Covalent Radius." March 2, 1937.
- "Ionic Character of Bonds." April 11, 1937.
- "Orientation of CN- groups in NaCN." April 1, 1939.
- Review of The Nature of the Chemical Bond by Leslie Sutton. May 1940.
- "Resonance." July 29, 1946.
- "The Electronic Structure of Excited States of Simple Molecules." June 30, 1948.
- "The Teaching of General Chemistry." March 30, 1949.
- "Talk to Students". December 10, 1954.
- "Modern Structural Chemistry." December 11, 1954.
- Notes on fourteen 1921-1922 Oregon Agricultural College physical chemistry students,
including Linus Pauling. 1961.
- "Statement by Linus Pauling about the Manuscript on the Nature of the Chemical Bond." August 6, 1979.
- "The Development of the Concept of the Chemical Bond." January 17, 1983.
- "X-Ray Crystallography and the Nature of the Chemical Bond." April 18, 1991.
Quotes
"I think that it is very interesting that one can see the [psi] functions of Schrödinger’s
wave mechanics by means of the X-ray study of crystals. This work should be continued
experimentally. I believe that much information regarding the nature of the chemical
bond will result from it."
Linus Pauling. Letter to A. A. Noyes. 1926.
"My wife and I think of you often. Our favorite daydream has for its theme a visit
to Manchester."
Linus Pauling. Letter to William Lawrence Bragg. March 8, 1928.
"I am enclosing a copy of a manuscript which Mr. Sturdivant and I have prepared, dealing
with the structure of brookite. We feel rather confident in our structure, and are
pleased to have begun work in the field which you recently opened -- the study of
complex ionic crystals."
Linus Pauling. Letter to William Lawrence Bragg. May 31, 1928.
"...[T]o awaken an interest in chemistry in students we mustn’t make the courses consist
entirely of explanations, forgetting to mention what there is to be explained."
Linus Pauling. Letter to A. A. Noyes. November 18, 1930.
"Even the formal justification of the electron-pair bond in the simplest cases...requires
a formidable array of symbols and equations."
Linus Pauling. "The nature of the chemical bond. Application of results obtained from the quantum
mechanics and from a theory of paramagnetic susceptibility to the structure of molecules."
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 53 (April 1931): 1367-1400. 1931.
"I consider that the field of work in which Dr. Pauling is engaged, namely the study
of the chemical bond and of valence from the standpoint of modern physics, is the
most important line of research in theoretical chemistry today; and I venture to believe
that there is no one in the world who in the same degree has chemical background and
at the same time has the physical knowledge, mathematical power, and originality required
for the handling of this problem."
A. A. Noyes. Letter to William Foster. October 15, 1931.
"I should like to do some work (with Professor Yost) in an attempt to prepare certain
compounds of xenon suggested by theoretical arguments. No doubt your xenon is precious;
if, however, you could lend us 10 cc or so (of not necessarily pure stuff), we would
try to return it to you either as such or in some compound (I hope), and we would
be properly grateful."
Linus Pauling. Letter to Fred Allen. September 13, 1932.
[Pauling] has a speculative mind of the first order, great analytical ability, and
the genius to keep in close and inspiring touch with experimental work.... He...is
nearly universally rated as the leading theoretical chemist of the world.
Warren Weaver. Weaver diary notes, as referenced in Force of Nature, by Tom Hager, p. 187. October 1933.
"I have just returned from a short vacation for which the only books I took were a
half-dozen detective stories and your 'Chemical Bond'. I found yours the most exciting
of the lot."
G.N. Lewis. Letter to Linus Pauling. August 25, 1939.
"I have been very much interested by your new book and have assigned several of the
chapters for reading in connection with a graduate course. As evidence of my interest
in it I can cite the fact that it is the first scientific book which I can remember
reading during the course of a fishing trip, although I have carried many with me
in the past."
Charles P. Smyth. Letter to Linus Pauling. December 15, 1939.
"Just recently we have been having an unusually large sale of the book. This morning,
for instance, we received a cablegram from Japan for 100 copies. Our stock in this
country is now below 1,000 and we must arrange for a new printing or a new edition."
W.S. Schaefer. Letter to Linus Pauling. July 15, 1941.
"Dr. Linus Pauling is the man for me / He makes violent changes in my chemistry /
Oh, fie, when he rolls his eyes / All my atoms ionize."
Chemistry-Biology Stock Company, C.I.T.. Song lyrics from "The Road to Stockholm." 1954.
"I doubt that many Nobel Prizes have been so popular with the masses in science....
[A]lmost all are delighted that the Nobel Prize embarrasses the State Department."
Charles Coryell. Letter to J. Robert Oppenheimer, as referenced in Force of Nature, by Tom Hager, p. 451. November 2, 1954.
"I can remember that I was asked, perhaps when I was a junior, if I would give some
lectures in the evening for students who were having trouble in freshman chemistry
. . . I can remember presenting chemical bond theory on the 'hook-and-eye' basis .
. . [When] I ran across the papers by Langmuir which were published that year . .
. I was very impressed by this work on the electronic structure of molecules or ideas
about shared electron pair bonds, and it may well be that that was the start of my
interest in chemical bonding."
Linus Pauling. Interview by John Heilbron, in Linus Pauling: A Man and His Science, by Anthony Serafini. 1964.
"When I was in Europe...I received a letter from A. A. Noyes saying that he was writing
to offer me an appointment as 'Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry and Mathematical
Physics,' and I accepted it, but by the time that I got here it had been changed to
'Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry' . . . I don't know what happened with
the physics, whether Millikan objected to my having a joint appointment or whether
Noyes decided . . . [Noyes] was preventing me from going to Berkeley, and he may have
decided that he didn't want me associated with the physics department in this way,
that perhaps I would shift."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"At Berkeley and at Pasadena, the chemists, the physical chemists, were learning as
much physics and mathematics as the physicists did and they were able to take advantage
of this opportunity in the way that European chemists were not."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"Goudsmit and I were never together, I think, during the period when [The Structure of Line Spectra] was written. He would write a draft of some material that he thought ought to go
in the book and then using that as a basis I wrote the corresponding sections of the
book."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"[P.W.] Bridgman . . . would say that a question that does not have operational significance,
that does not lead to an experiment of some sort, or an observation, it's significant.
I never have been bothered by the detailed or penetrating discussions about interpretation
of quantum mechanics."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"The department of chemistry [at Harvard] seemed to me to be rather uncooperative
in that the different professors ran their own little groups...I just thought that
I wouldn't feel at home there...."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"One day, late in the day...I had an idea. It was the basic idea of hybrid orbitals.
I was trying to understand why the carbon atom is tetrahedral, forms bonds directed
towards the four corners of a tetrahedron. Even as early as 1924, I had made a model
of methane, in which I said the four outer electrons of the carbon are in orbits directed
towards the corners of a tetrahedron.... When quantum mechanics came along, a result
was confirmed that had been accepted earlier, that the four outer electrons in the
carbon are of two different kinds.... I thought 'the basic principles of quantum mechanics
permit us to combine these functions from the Schrödinger equation in another way.'
And I said to myself: 'Let’s suppose that I look just at the distribution in various
directions, and not worry about the difference in the radial distribution for those.'
This permitted rather simple calculations to be made in a straightforward manner.
The first result I got was that the best bonds that the carbon atom can form are directed
towards the four corners of a tetrahedron. So, in 1931, I had a simple theory of the
tetrahedral carbon atom and an explanation of a great bit of organic chemistry."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), volume 6. March 27, 1964.
"There was this long gap from 1928 when I wrote my first paper on quantum mechanics
of the chemical bond in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, and 1931 when I wrote the first significant paper. Well, there was this gap because
I was having so much trouble getting a result that was in simple enough form to be
valuable to chemists and to have more significance than numbers that you would get
out of a computer nowadays."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"I was just as pleased to be Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry but pretty
soon, when I became Professor in 1931, I said I wanted to have the title of Professor
of Chemistry -- not theoretical chemistry...not physical chemistry...just Professor
of Chemistry."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"We had to have the ideas about partial ionic character of covalent bonds, you know,
which I developed in about ’33, ’32, before it became possible to discuss electro-neutrality
in a very significant way."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"I published a paper with Jack Sherman on the calculation of some of these overlap
integrals with a simplification.... It's in The Nature of the Chemical Bond, the results are -- with a simplification of some sort; it's like taking Slater functions,
I don't know what it was, but actually evaluating the overlap integrals. Our conclusion
was that the bond strength function giving angular dependence alone is really pretty
good -- not perfect but pretty good."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview
by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"The theory of quantum mechanical resonance of molecules among several valence-bond
structures constituted a major addition to the classical structure of organic chemistry.
This theory was developed in the period from 1931 on by a number of investigators
including Slater, E. Huckel, G. W. Wheland and me."
Linus Pauling. "Fifty years of progress in structural chemistry and molecular biology," Daedalus, 99 (Fall 1970): 988-1014. 1970.
"I remember clearly how much different my own thinking about molecular structure and
the chemical bond was in 1935 from what it had been ten years earlier. In 1925...I
had no way of distinguishing between the good ideas and the poor ideas about the electronic
structure of molecules."
Linus Pauling. "Fifty years of progress in structural chemistry and molecular biology," Daedalus, 99 (Fall 1970): 988-1014. 1970.
"By 1935...I felt that I had an essentially complete understanding of the nature of
the chemical bond."
Linus Pauling. "Fifty years of progress in structural chemistry and molecular biology," Daedalus, 99 (Fall 1970): 988-1014. 1970.
"Just as evolution is inseparably connected with Darwin (and not with Wallace, whose
paper on evolution prompted Darwin to write The Origin of Species), so too Pauling
and the chemical bond are tightly associated, and Slater's position, though important,
is secondary and supportive."
Robert J. Paradowski. The Structural Chemistry of Linus Pauling, pg. 333. 1972.
"Pauling's paper on bond energy and electronegativity proved to be highly influential.
The qualitative concept of electronegativity as the ability of an atom in a molecule
to attract electrons to itself was an old one. Early in the twentieth century, it
was associated in a crude way with the metallic or non-metallic character of an element,
or with its place in the activity series of the metals. The importance of Pauling's
paper derives from the fact that he was the first person to put this property on a
numerical basis."
Robert J. Paradowski. The Structural Chemistry of Linus Pauling, pg. 450. 1972.
"In 1931 when my papers on the nature of the chemical bond appeared, Professor Noyes,
who was chairman of the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, said that
I probably would get the Nobel Prize someday. Well, I thought, that's nice of the
old guy to say that, but I'm a little skeptical myself. And as the years went by,
I thought, I don't do the sort of work for which Nobel Prizes are given."
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977.
"I'd begun to think about the theory of the chemical bond very seriously in 1926,
'27, after quantum mechanics was discovered and then in 1928 I published a paper,
a preliminary paper, and said that I would write more later on. I didn't write anything
more for three years because the problem turned out to be such a hard problem, the
mathematical problem, that I couldn't solve it."
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977.
"It seems to me that I have introduced into my work on the chemical bond a way of
thinking that might not have been introduced by anyone else, at least not for quite
a while. I suppose that the complex of ideas that I originated in the period of around
1928 to 1933 -- and 1931 was probably my most important paper -- has had the greatest
impact on chemistry."
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977.
"Heisenberg has discussed the coupled double harmonic oscillator, and has shown that
the ordinary rules of quantization lead to two non-combining sets of states in one
of which the electrons are in phase and out of phase. The energy of the system is
successively transferred from one to the other -- resonance!"
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977.
"I think my work on the chemical bond probably has been most important in changing
the activities of chemists all over the world -- changing their ways of thinking and
affecting the progress of the science."
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977.
"For five years, beginning in spring 1929, I spent one or two months each year in
Berkeley as a visiting lecturer in physics and chemistry. During these extended visits
to Berkeley I had the pleasure of talking with [G.N.] Lewis for many hours, in his
office, his home, and in his Marin County country place."
Linus Pauling. "Pauling on G.N. Lewis," Chemtech 13 (June 1983): 334-337. 1983.
"One could say that Pauling's 'failure' was to plant a lot of seeds, basic ideas,
without working them out fully.... As soon as Slater gets an idea he works it out
to the end before he gets a new one. But that is also dangerous, of course because
you look at the trees and you don't see the forest...[Pauling] looks at the forest
and lets other people...work out the specific individual things in detail; he has
a terrifically lively intellect, reading [Pauling's] paper, the information here is
just tremendous, the ideas flow out of the pen, and there are several lifetimes of
work...to be done."
Sten Samson. Interviewed by Anthony Serafini for Linus Pauling: A Man and His Science. 1984.
"Einstein came over here and attended a scientific meeting and at the end of the meeting
Pauling was to deliver a paper; Pauling was introduced and delivered a paper in flawless
German! And after meeting him, Einstein congratulated him and asked him, 'Where did
you learn to speak such flawless German?' And Pauling said, 'Oh, I spent a year in
Germany' and Einstein said, 'You learned to speak German in a year like that? Why
I've been here over two years and I can't speak English yet!'
W. K. Ferrier. Interviewed by Anthony Serafini for Linus Pauling: A Man and His Science. 1984.
"The paper of Heitler and London on H2 for the first time seemed to provide a basic understanding, which could be extended
to other molecules. Linus Pauling at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena
soon used the valence bond method. . . . As a master salesman and showman, Linus persuaded
chemists all over the world to think of typical molecular structures in terms of the
valence bond method."
Robert Mulliken. Life of a Scientist, pp. 60-61. 1989.
"Pasadena at that time seemed an earthly paradise, with good science too. We had a
dip in the Pacific Ocean at Christmas [1935]. Although Pauling and I were at that
time rivals on the subject of valence bond theory, we had friendly relations with
the Pauling family: Linus and Ava Helen one day took us for a memorable expedition
into the desert."
Robert Mulliken. Life of a Scientist, pg. 97. 1989.
"I had something of a shock when I went to Europe in 1926 and discovered that there
were a good number of people around that I thought to be smarter than me."
Linus Pauling. Interview with Tom Hager, published in Force of Nature, p. 130. 1991.
"Anybody could see that quantum mechanics must lead to the tetrahedral carbon atom,
because we have it. But the equations were so complicated that I never could be sure
that I could present the arguments in such a way that they would be convincing to
anybody."
Linus Pauling. Interview with Tom Hager, published in Force of Nature, p. 142. 1991.
"My attitude was, why shouldn’t I use the understanding that I have developed of the
nature of crystals in inorganic substances to proceed to predict their structures?"
Linus Pauling. Interview with Tom Hager, published in Force of Nature, p. 144. 1991.
"I might well have become egotistical as a result [of the Langmuir Prize].... But...I
think that I just said I shouldn’t let this go to my head. I shouldn’t think I’m really
better than other people even though I do this one thing better than other people."
Linus Pauling. Interview with Tom Hager, published in Force of Nature, p. 160. 1991.
"I had become interested in the question of the nature of the chemical bond, after
having read the 1916 paper on the shared-electron-pair chemical bond by G.N. Lewis
and the several 1919 and 1920 papers by Irving Langmuir on this subject."
Linus Pauling. The Chemical Bond: Structure of Dynamics, Ahmed Zewail, ed. 1992.
"My year in Munich was very productive. I not only got a very good grasp of quantum
mechanics -- by attending Sommerfeld's lectures on the subject, as well as other lectures
by him and other people in the University, and also by my own study of published papers
-- but in addition I was able to begin attacking many problems dealing with the nature
of the chemical bond by applying quantum mechanics to these problems."
Linus Pauling. The Chemical Bond: Structure of Dynamics, Ahmed Zewail, ed. 1992.
"I consider my entry into the field of x-ray crystallography, nine years after it
had been developed, to be just about the most fortunate accident that I have experienced
in my life."
Linus Pauling. The Chemical Bond: Structure of Dynamics, Ahmed Zewail, ed. 1992. Audio Clips
Video Clips
- "Valence and Molecular Structure," Lectures 1 and 2. 1957.
- Valence and Molecular Structure: Lecture 1, Part 1. (5:35)
- Lecture 1, Part 2. (5:47)
- Lecture 1, Part 3. (5:55)
- Lecture 1, Part 4. (6:05)
- Lecture 1, Part 5. (6:53)
- Lecture 1, Part 6. (5:54)
- Lecture 1, Part 7. (6:18)
- Lecture 1, Part 8. (5:21)
- Lecture 1, Part 9. (2:03)
- Valence and Molecular Structure: Lecture 2, Part 1. (5:22)
- Lecture 2, Part 2. (3:15)
- Lecture 2, Part 3. (5:55)
- Lecture 2, Part 4. (4:31)
- Lecture 2, Part 5. (8:45)
- Lecture 2, Part 6. (6:38)
- Lecture 2, Part 7. (4:50)
- Lecture 2, Part 8. (7:00)
- Lecture 2, Part 9. (2:45)
- "Valence and Molecular Structure," Lecture 3. 1957.
- Valence and Molecular Structure: Lecture 3, Part 1. (7:26)
- Lecture 3, Part 2. (5:26)
- Lecture 3, Part 3. (7:15)
- Lecture 3, Part 4. (4:37)
- Lecture 3, Part 5. (6:39)
- Lecture 3, Part 6. (6:42)
- Lecture 3, Part 7. (3:50)
- Lecture 3, Part 8. (5:45)
- "Linus Pauling, Crusading Scientist." 1977.
- Bond Breakthrough. (2:14)
- Lloyd Jeffress. (1:14)
- Nobel Prize. (0:48)
- "Linus Pauling: A Century of Science and Life." 1988.
- A Great Achievement. (0:58)
- The Nobel Chemistry Prize. (0:49)
- X-Ray Crystallography. (1:16)
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